Aspects of subjective well-being can thus be influenced in several ways by social pressures and other interpersonal processes. However, factors encouraging or inhibiting the importance of those influences still require more detailed specification, For example, it may be envisaged that, as with social conformity more generally, well-being influences from other people are stronger in settings of ambiguity, when employees are uncertain or ambivalent in their feelings. Effects are also likely to differ between individuals. For instance, Côté has drawn attention to possible variations arising from neuroticism, self-monitoring and unequal status. Differences may also be expected as a function of individuals’ identification with a work-group. Employees who feel committed to a group’s aims and processes are likely to respond more strongly than other to cues from other group members. Subjective well-being is likely to be one outcome affected by those cues.